South Africa Gets Its First

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

South Africa Gets Its First South Africa gets its first bookWhile doing research for his doctoratetown in literary tourism, Darryl Earl David, lecturer in Afrikaans at the University of KwaZulu- Natal, came across the international “book town” concept and realized that this could be a means to reverse the economic decline of small villages and towns in South Africa. Here he explains why Richmond in the Karoo was designated the first book town in the country conomic development is a serious and have offered large tracts of agricul- ism – a book town. This concept is a fairly issue for communities that have tural land to city dwellers in search of that recent, and highly successful, addition to suffered decades of rural decline. idyllic country retreat. Small towns and attempts by rural communities to boost Of late, tourism (whether right- villages try to distinguish themselves with tourism, and thereby the local economies. fully or wrongfully) seems to be such special events as trout festivals, mam- According to the International Organi- Epunted as the answer for these communi- poer festivals, biltong festivals, oyster fes- sation of Book Towns (IOB), a book town ties. Thus, farmers now offer accommoda- tivals, witblits festivals, cherry festivals etc. is a small rural town or village of between tion on working farms; other farmers have The list is endless. Not very well known in 500-1500 people, with a high concentra- decided to cash in on the property boom, South Africa is a truly novel form of tour- tion of booksellers, specializing mostly in DARRYL DAVID DARRYL The picturesque historic buildings were one of the factors that contribute to Richmond being chosen as the first book town 34 Village Life No 30 • June / July 2008 second hand and rare and outdated books. The bookshops are often twinned with cof- fee shops, internet cafes, bakeries, cheese or wine shops or with artisan enterprises such as paper production, book design, book illustration and the dwindling art of bookbinding. Some of these bookshops also sell arts and crafts and antiques. Most book town develop around vil- lages of historic significance or of scenic beauty. The most crucial ingredient is cheap property – a rarity in cities. In order to be successful, booksellers must have lots of inexpensive display and storage space, as low overheads form the cornerstone of a profitable business. Many cities may have the number of booksellers to match that of a book town, but they are rarely clustered in one area. Attracting enough DAVID DARRYL booksellers to a rural community creates a critical mass that is irresistible to the bibli- ophile. These bibliophiles have a multiplier effect on the economy, because they are usually discerning tourists with high spending potential. They prefer to stay in guesthouses and bed- and- breakfasts. They pound the streets in search of that special antique that will become the conversation piece at their next dinner. They patronize the local cafe, the quaint restaurants and sometimes even become residents of these towns after exchanging a few months sal- ary with the local estate agent. NK, BREDEVOORT (2) The idea of a book town was coined LEDERI E by maverick Richard Booth, way back N in the sixties. His dream was to create EVELI the largest centre for selling second-hand books in the world. Today, Hay-on-Wye in Wales attracts over a million visitors a year. Booth started the venture all on his own with just one bookshop. Slowly, he PHOTO COURTESY OF bought up the empty buildings in a town whose population was dwindling, and Top: The Medieval town square in turned these buildings into bookshops. Damme, the second book town in Booth always maintained that “a town The Netherlands. It is located only full of books could be an international 5 kilometres from Brugge, known attraction”. Today, his “build-it-and-they- for its canals will-come attitude” has resulted in Hay- on-Wye being home to 38 bookshops, and Above: The selling of books is not Book Towns developing in approximately limited to conventional shops. 25 other regions throughout the world. Open-air bookshelves such as this Some of the more famous European one in Bredevoort, Holland, are book towns are Redu in the French- also found in other book towns speaking part of Belgium, the second oldest book town in the world, which Left: The open bookshelf is most has 23 bookshops. It is situated in the often unattended, leaving it to picturesque Ardennes region, a few min- the customer to help himself and utes away from the principality of Luxem- deposit the required money in some bourg. Damme, the second Belgian book kind of container provided for the town, also happens to be the most pictur- purpose (Bredevoort) esque of the three book towns I visited, and is situated only 5 kilometres from Brugge, (referred to as the “Venice of the North”). Bredevoort is the national book town of The Netherlands, situated about 4 hours from Amsterdam and was host to Village Life No 30 • June / July 2008 35 the first International Book Town Festival in 1998. Other famous book towns of the world are Fjaerland in Norway; Wigtown in Scotland and most recently, Atherstone in England. The IOB has a wealth of research per- taining to success factors for book towns. According to research by Prof Anthony Seaton, there are 17 critical success factors one should consider when selecting a loca- tion for a book town. These factors were extrapolated from Seaton’s research on the factors that contributed to the success of the four most successful book towns in the world: Hay-on-Wye in Wales; Redu in Belgium; Bredevoort in the Netherlands and Becherel in France. In the South Afri- can context, it my be summarized as fol- lows: existing book expertise; scenic appeal of town; historic/cultural attractions of town; property availability; tourism infra- structure; economic importance of book Dr Darryl Earl David with his daughter, ........., at the launch in Richmond town to region; leadership; organisation and speed of implementation; access; Northern Cape. I looked at, amongst oth- with beautiful architecture, an imposing catchment population. ers, Aberdeen and Hofmeyr in the Eastern church which is said has the highest pulpit As one can see from this list, there are Cape; Philippolis in the Free State; Hano- in South Africa. Richmond is also home numerous towns in South Africa which ver, Philips town and Richmond in the to only one of two horse museums in the would satisfy some of these criteria. So Northern Cape. world – the other is in Kentucky, USA. where did I start? My research indicated Richmond, right on the N1, was And like most of the book towns I visited that book towns are projects about rural eventually chosen. At the time, it was a in Europe, Richmond also has an old-age regeneration. Thus, I decided to focus town on the rise with a reasonably devel- home that used to be the town’s hotel. But on the poorer provinces of South Africa, oped tourism infrastructure, good guest- its biggest strength is its position right the Free State, the Eastern Cape and the houses and two restaurants. It is a town on the N1; no other town has this direct DARRYL DAVID DARRYL The Richmond Horse Museum is one of only two in the world 36 Village Life No 30 • June / July 2008 Book Town Richmond was opened in September last year by well-known actor and DAVID DARRYL author, Patrick Mynhardt Richmond A friendly resident of Richmond on her typical Karoo stoep accessibility. And the town has a strong tourism committee – thanks to the inspi- ration of Peter Baker, a former Canadian vet who fell in love with Richmond on DAVID DARRYL his journeys to Stellenbosch to visit his children at university. Here was the type of charismatic, tenacious leader one needs if one is to embark on an undertaking as a national book town. More importantly, though, a book town needs booksellers, and a few people interested in books had already bought property in Richmond (three had previously owned bookshops). And so it was that on the 20 Septem- ber last year, Book Town Richmond was opened by well-known actor and author, Patrick Mynhardt. There were three book- shops: two of them, The Book Orphanage and Bookarooz, are run by Darryl Con- nolly, an ex-Johannesburger who came to Richmond hoping he would find his The Dutch Reformed church reputedly has the highest pulpit in the country muse to help him complete his novel. The Book Orphanage specialises in Afrikaans literature and a growing collection of cof- fee-table books; Bookarooz stocks almost everything. The third shop, Richmond DAVID DARRYL Books and Prints, houses a fine selection of Africana books. A fourth one, called Diesel and Dust Bookshop, opened its doors recently. It is run by Annette Loveday, an ex-Zim- bawean. The next bookstore to be opened will be a Sports Bookshop, in which a SA sports museum will also be housed. Twinned with the bookshop is going to be a sports bar which the owner, John Don- aldson, yet another Johannesburger, plans to name The Tippling Philosopher! We plan to have an annual Karoo Book Festival later in the year. Hopefully, others will be inspired by what they see. n Dr David may be contacted by e-mail at [email protected] The Richmond Supper Klub, a popular local venue Village Life No 30 • June / July 2008 37.
Recommended publications
  • Open Merfeldlangston.Pdf
    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School Department of French and Francophone Studies THE VILLAGES DU LIVRE: LOCAL IDENTITY, CULTURAL POLITICS, AND PRINT CULTURE IN CONTEMPORARY FRANCE A Thesis in French by Audra Lynn Merfeld-Langston © 2007 Audra Lynn Merfeld-Langston Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2007 The thesis of Audra Lynn Merfeld-Langston was reviewed and approved* by the following: Willa Z. Silverman Associate Professor of French and Francophone Studies and Jewish Studies Thesis Advisor Chair of Committee Thomas A. Hale Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of African, French, and Comparative Literature Head of the Department of French and Francophone Studies Greg Eghigian Associate Professor of Modern European History Jennifer Boittin Assistant Professor of French, Francophone Studies and History and Josephine Berry Weiss Early Career Professor in the Humanities *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School iii ABSTRACT Over the past several decades, the cultural phenomenon of the villages du livre has exploded throughout the Hexagon. Taking their cue from the original book town, Hay-on-Wye, in Wales, rural French communities once in danger of disappearing have reclaimed their economic future and their heritage. Founded in 1961, Hay-on-Wye has served as a model for other towns to establish a used book trade, organize literary festivals, and promote the practice of traditional book arts that include calligraphy, binding, paper-making, and printing. In the French villages du livre of Bécherel (Bretagne), Montolieu (Languedoc), Fontenoy-la-Joûte (Lorraine), Montmorillon (Poitou-Charentes), and La Charité-sur-Loire (Bourgogne), ancillary enterprises such as museums, bookstores, cafés, and small hotels now occupy buildings that had stood vacant for years.
    [Show full text]
  • 25 Great Ideas of New Urbanism
    25 Great Ideas of New Urbanism 1 Cover photo: Lancaster Boulevard in Lancaster, California. Source: City of Lancaster. Photo by Tamara Leigh Photography. Street design by Moule & Polyzoides. 25 GREAT IDEAS OF NEW URBANISM Author: Robert Steuteville, CNU Senior Dyer, Victor Dover, Hank Dittmar, Brian Communications Advisor and Public Square Falk, Tom Low, Paul Crabtree, Dan Burden, editor Wesley Marshall, Dhiru Thadani, Howard Blackson, Elizabeth Moule, Emily Talen, CNU staff contributors: Benjamin Crowther, Andres Duany, Sandy Sorlien, Norman Program Fellow; Mallory Baches, Program Garrick, Marcy McInelly, Shelley Poticha, Coordinator; Moira Albanese, Program Christopher Coes, Jennifer Hurley, Bill Assistant; Luke Miller, Project Assistant; Lisa Lennertz, Susan Henderson, David Dixon, Schamess, Communications Manager Doug Farr, Jessica Millman, Daniel Solomon, Murphy Antoine, Peter Park, Patrick Kennedy The 25 great idea interviews were published as articles on Public Square: A CNU The Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU) Journal, and edited for this book. See www. helps create vibrant and walkable cities, towns, cnu.org/publicsquare/category/great-ideas and neighborhoods where people have diverse choices for how they live, work, shop, and get Interviewees: Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, Jeff around. People want to live in well-designed Speck, Dan Parolek, Karen Parolek, Paddy places that are unique and authentic. CNU’s Steinschneider, Donald Shoup, Jeffrey Tumlin, mission is to help build those places. John Anderson, Eric Kronberg, Marianne Cusato, Bruce Tolar, Charles Marohn, Joe Public Square: A CNU Journal is a Minicozzi, Mike Lydon, Tony Garcia, Seth publication dedicated to illuminating and Harry, Robert Gibbs, Ellen Dunham-Jones, cultivating best practices in urbanism in the Galina Tachieva, Stefanos Polyzoides, John US and beyond.
    [Show full text]
  • News Updates Please Email To
    Old House Museum Volume 1 | Issue 3 Updates 9th April 2020 Bringing you the latest news from B.D.H.S and the Museum. Bakewell heritage Open Week by John Boyle It's important that we have something to look forward to - and something that will bring visitors flocking back to Bakewell and the Old House Museum. A group of people have been working on a series of events to fill a Bakewell Heritage Open Week between Sunday 13th to Saturday 19th September 2020. The draft programme at present is: - Sunday 14.30 - 16.30 Church tower - clocks and Pauline Boyne bells Monday am + pm tbc Church open events Jeff Marsh Tuesday 10.00 - 13.00 Long Bakewell heritage guided walk Wednesday 10.30, 11.30, Old House, exterior tour Linda Merriman 13.30, 14.30 Adrian Wills Thursday 10.30 - 14.00 Guided walk - Secrets & Susan Hillam Legends Michael Hillam Friday am tbc Churchyard talk Peter Barker Saturday 10.00 - 12.00 = Clock tower - clock and Pauline Boyle 14.30 - 16.30 bells This programme will be advertised widely although there are limits on numbers for some events. If you wish to organise a similar event during this Bakewell Heritage Open Week, or help with the ones above, please contact John Boyle [email protected] soon as possible. Great images from John of the Church, Bellframe and clock front. 2 Clock front Susan Hillam leads 'Secrets & Legends" Bakewell businesses project - from George Challenger Members might like to improve the project described below by adding or correcting information on shops and businesses to the tables I have prepared.
    [Show full text]
  • Listen to the Voice of God in the Voice of Youth Because They Will Tell Us What They Expect of the Church
    Year XI - n. 57 August–October 2018 Figlie di San Paolo - Casa generalizia Via San Giovanni Eudes, 25 - 00163 Roma [email protected] - www.paoline.org Listen to the voice of God in the voice of youth because they will tell us what they expect of the Church. Bishop Raúl Biord Castillo of La Guaira, Venezuela Foto: Štěpán Rek Summary DEAREST SISTERS... PAULINE PANORAMA The Circumscriptions Italy: Inauguration of Regina Apostolorum Hospital’s Multi-Purpose Hall Celebrating the Sunday of the Word in Prison Bolivia: International Book Fair Congo: Inauguration of an FSP Apostolic Center in Matadi Germany: Frankfurt Book Fair Great Britain: Ecumenical Award Pakistan: “Jesus calls you to serve” Peru: Recounting the Bible to Children Philippines: Cardinal Sin Catholic Book Awards Romania: 25 Years of Pauline Presence Our studies Pastoral Communication Through Films Bridging the Digital Divide in Nigeria THE SYNOD ON YOUNG PEOPLE Synod in Full Swing MOVING Ahead WITH Thecla Woman Associated to Priestly Zeal SHARING OUR STORIES My Vocation AGORÀ OF Communications Virtual and Real: An Anthropological Change? Calendar of the General Government THE PAULINE FAMILY Korea: 1st Formation Course on the Charism of the Pauline Family Italy: 22nd Course on the Pauline Charism Italy: Good Shepherd Sisters: 80th Anniversary of Foundation IN THE SPOTLIGHT Window on the Church Sacred Music: 18th Edition of Anima Mundi Digitization of the World’s Oldest Library Peace Journalism Takes Center Stage in the Vatican Window on the World Library of the Future Wales: Book Town The Most Beautiful Book Store in the World Window on Communications Religion Today Film Festival 2018 Theme of World Communications Day 2019 Happy Birthday, Twitter! CALLED TO ETERNAL LIFE 2 forth, rediscovering Pauline prophecy and “TogeTHER WITH YOUNG PEOPLE, renewing its missionary thrust so as to find LET US BRING THE GOSPEL To all” new modes of proclamation and open fron- tiers of every type, both geographical and of his is the theme of thought” (cf.
    [Show full text]
  • Dcco4eln DEMME
    DCCO4Eln DEMME ED 033 S2E TE 001 556 MIME Gast, Eavid K. TITLE Minority Americans in Children's Literature. Put Late Jan E7 Ncte 13p. Journal Cit Elementary English; v44 n1 p12-23 Jan 1967 EDRS Price EBBS Price MF-S0.25 HC -$0.75 DescriEtcrs American Indians, *Childrens Eccks, Chinese Americans, Cultural Images, Cultural Traits, Discriminatory Attitudes (Social), Ethnic Groups, *Ethnic Stereotypes, Japanese Americans, Majority Attitudes, *Minority Grcups, Negroes, Racial Discriminaticn, Religious Discrimination, *Social Discrimination, *Scciccultural Patterns, Spanish Americans, Textbook Bias Abstract Children's ficticn written tetimen 1945 and 1962 was analyzed for current stereotypes cf minority Americans, and the results were compared with related studies of adult fiction and school textbocks. Iwo analytic instruments were applied tc 114 incrity characters selected from 42 children's books about American Indians, Chinese, Japanese, Negroes, and Spanish Americans currently living in the United States. In this sampling, virtually no negative stereotypes cf incrity Americans were fcund; the differences in race, creed, and custcms of incrity citizens were fcund tc be dignified far acre than in either adult magazine fiction cr textbcoks; and similarities in bhavicr, attitudes, and values between ajcrity and incrity Americans were emphasized rather than their differences. (Reccmmendations for acticn tc be taken on the basis cf the results, proposals for further experimental study, and a table ranking the verbal stereotypes of the 114 minority American characters are included.) (JE) Tom'oo 556 041101irt 1/I ffEreplirEtttEilifirliii111I ED033928t trrrn aaa za a ate 2M-4 43 2 4IFflikilliffqqq141011Ifiliiiiigu Ph;WIN[Ohl 94iihiPi frOfin111PgI° VIIillIII'riotItiii11 lo;111t01iili;fr irtili@Rigt rit 1 !art la ImeO I.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Books in Book Towns
    Regenerating Regional Culture: A Study of the International Book Town Movement Jane Elizabeth Frank BA (Hons) The University of Queensland MBus (Arts Mgt) Queensland University of Technology School of Humanities Arts, Education and Law Griffith University Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy September 2015 Declaration This work has not previously been submitted for a degree or diploma in any university. To the best of my knowledge and belief, this thesis contains no material previously published or written by another person except where due reference is made in the thesis itself. Jane Frank September 2015 ii Abstract This thesis explores the international Book Town Movement that, from its beginnings in the small Welsh market town of Hay-on-Wye in the early 1960s, has escalated to incorporate more than 50 villages and towns in 27 countries. This phenomenon has enabled peripheral communities in Europe and across the globe to reclaim their economic futures and impact on the cultural sphere as increasingly powerful sites and sources of creativity. This study seeks to understand the reasons for this renaissance of interest in the preservation of traditional print culture in the countryside at a point in history when the book publishing industry is in a state of flux as it adapts to new digital technologies and globalisation of markets, leading to a clarification of the relationship between new books and the second-hand book economy. At the centre of this investigation is an acknowledgement of the book as a unique item of cultural consumption and a catalyst in book town creation – at once a remarkable artefact and a springboard for contemporary cultural debate.
    [Show full text]
  • THE CAMBRIDGE History of the Book in Britain Volume VII the Twentieth Century and Beyond Edited by ANDREW NASH CLAIRE SQUIRES A
    This chapter has been accepted for publication and will appear in a revised form, subsequent to appropriate editorial input by Cambridge University Press, in The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain: Volume VII The Twentieth Century and Beyond. THE CAMBRIDGE History of the Book in Britain Volume VII The Twentieth Century and Beyond Edited by ANDREW NASH CLAIRE SQUIRES And IAN WILLISON 30 Book events, book environments DAVID FINKELSTEIN AND CLAIRE SQUIRES Since the Second World War, a common conception has been that the literary festival has become one of the key sites for the promotion of books and literary culture in the UK. As currently conceived by the myriad of festivals worldwide dedicated to celebrating literary culture and the book, the literary festival conjoins the commercial aspects found in trade book fairs around the world (selling books, exhibiting new titles, offering space for trade representatives to meet) with the promotion of new and established writers through public readings, book signings and encounters with readers. The literary festival has become a major fixture on the publishing circuit, utilised to showcase new works by established authors and provide high visibility and marketing opportunities for publishers. The first multi-sessional literary festival of this sort in Britain was launched in Cheltenham in 1949.1 In the post-war period, and particularly after 1970, the development of the literary festival continued, to the extent that by 2015, the number of literary and literature-related festivals in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales had risen exponentially to over 217.2 This growth, which is explored later in this chapter, attests to the values (social, cultural and financial) of such events to local economies and communities.
    [Show full text]
  • Creative Scotland
    Literature and Publishing Sector Review June 2015 By: Nordicity in association with Drew Wylie For: Creative Scotland Literature and Publishing Sector Review Final Report June 2015 Commissioned by: Creative Scotland Prepared by: in association with Table of Contents FOREWORD 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 3 1. SECTOR REVIEW CONTEXT 15 2. RE-SCOPING THE SECTOR 18 3. SCOTLAND’S WRITERS 20 4. DEVELOPING A NATION OF READERS 43 5. PUBLISHING IN SCOTLAND 52 6. THE SECTOR ECOSYSTEM 76 7. INTERNATIONAL PROMOTION AND MARKET DEVELOPMENT 95 8. BRINGING IT ALL TOGETHER 111 No title Lists 113 Conclusions 113 Recommendations 116 Figures 119 Tables 120 i Literature and Publishing Sector Review FOREWORD The Literature and Publishing Sector Review is the fifth Sector Review undertaken by Creative Scotland. It follows Reviews for Theatre, Dance, Music and Film, while Reviews for Visual Arts, Creative Learning and Equalities, Diversity and Inclusion will also be published this year. Once complete, the Sector Reviews will form the basis from which we will develop a broader Arts Strategy, a strategy that will sit alongside those for Screen, Creative Industries and International, all of which underpin the delivery of Creative Scotland’s 10 Year Plan, Unlocking Potential, Embracing Ambition. The Arts Strategy will provide a national overview of the arts in contemporary Scotland - highlighting opportunities, challenges, connections and the role of the arts in society. It will set out a shared action plan that will contribute to the long-term health of the arts, including the support needed for individual artists to thrive here. It will be a strategy rooted in, and of, Scotland’s people and places.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Issue Briefing Book
    ISSUE BRIEFING BOOK: 1 WHAT’s InsIDE? Introduction ..............................................................................................................................4 Emerging Issues: Public Health ..............................................................................................6 Connecticut Must Address the Structural Issues Causing Disproportionate Harm to the Health of Communities of Color .........................................................................................................7 Family Economic Security: Housing .....................................................................................13 Part 1: Investing in Affordable Housing will Improve the Economic Stability and Well-Being of Connecticut Residents ......................................................................................................14 Part 2: Connecticut’s Eviction Crisis Predates the COVID-19 Pandemic, and it will Only Intensify in the Pandemic’s Aftermath Unless the State Acts ................................................18 Family Economic Security: Justice ........................................................................................22 Part 1: Give Me Liberty - The Rising Toll of COVID-19 on Connecticut’s Incarcerated Populations and why Decarceration must be part of the Solution .........................................23 Part 2: Keeping Undocumented Families in Connecticut Healthy, Safe, Connected, and Together during the COVID-19 Pandemic ............................................................................30
    [Show full text]
  • Planning History
    PLANNING HISTORY BULLETIN OF THE INTlERNATIONAL PLANNING HISTORY SOCIETY VOL. 19 NO. 2/ 3 • 1997 llSSN 0959-5005 PlLANNKNG HKSTORY PlLANNJIN"G HJIS'fORY BULIEfII ' OF THE n ITEPJ IAnOllAt fLAt n m IG HISTOP:{ srJ":IETI BULlETIN OF TIlE DITERNATIONAL PLANNING HISTORY SOCIETY EDITOR Or Pieter Uyttenhove CONTENTS 64 rue des Moines Or Peter J. larkham P·?5017 Birmingham School of Planning Paris University of Central England France Perry BaIT Birmingham Professor Shun·jchi Watanabe 8422SU Science University of Tokyo UK Yamazaki , Noda-shi Chiba-ken 278 rei: 0121 331 5145 / Fax: 0121 356 9915 Japan E-mail: [email protected] rei: 81 47424 1501 I Fax: 81 471 25 7833 Professor Stephen V. Ward EDITOP.IAL page 2 EDITORIAL BOARD School of Planning Oxford Srookes University Il000eRS page 3 Or Gerhard Fehl Headington Lehrstuhl filr Planungstheorie Oxford AP..11CI P3 Technische Hochschule Aachen OX! 4LR 5100 Aachen UK Central London in the 1950s: comprehensive schemes Schinkelstrasse 1 Tel: 01865 483421 I Fax: 01865 483559 south of the Thames Germany Emmallue/ V. Marmams page 12 Tel: 0241 805029 / Fax: 02418888137 Professor Michael Ebner Department of History Town planning and conservationist policies in Or Kiki Kafkoula Lake Forest College Department of Urban and Regional Planning 555 North Sheridan Road the historic city centre of Barcelona (1860-1930) School of Architecture Lake Forest, IL 60045-2399 loall Ganau page 23 Aristotle University of Thessalonika USA Thessalonika 54006 Tel: 7087355135 / Fax: 708 735 6291 Landscape, neighbourhood m,d accessibility: Greece the contributions of Margaret Feilman to planning Tel: 3031 995495 / Fax: 3031 995576 and development in Western Australia 8arrie Melotte page 32 Professor Georgia Piccinato Published by the School of Planning, Faculty of the Istituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia Vladimir Semyonov and the first Russian Built Environment, UCE on behalf of the International Oipartimento di Urbanistica 'garden town' near Moscow 30125 Venezia Santa Croce 1957 Planning History Society.
    [Show full text]
  • Agenzia Servizi Editoriali RIGHTS LIST FRANKFURT BOOK FAIR
    Agenzia Servizi Editoriali RIGHTS LIST FRANKFURT BOOK FAIR 2011 FICTION Literary Fiction, Crimes, Historical Novels & Memoirs Agenzia Servizi Editoriali Anna Spadolini, Guido Lagomarsino Via Adelaide Bono Cairoli 37 | 20127 Milano | Italy Tel +39 02 28510504 | +39 02 87393515 email: [email protected] | www.serv-ed.it WORLD TRANSLATION RIGHTS ON BEHALF OF: Derive Approdi (Roma, Italy), p. 3 Ediciclo (Portogruaro, Italy), p. 6 Il Melangolo (Genova, Italy), p. Libros del Zorzal (Buenos Aires, Argentina), p. Magenes editorial (Milano, Italy), p. Manni editori (Lecce, Italy), p. Stampa Alternativa (Viterbo,Italy), p. 3 DERIVE APPRODI Translation rights: Agenzia Servizi Editoriali Various Authors LA FUGA DAL CARCERE Storia, teoria e pratica (Escaping from Prison. History, Theory and Practice) DeriveApprodi p. 192 - € 16.00 This book includes exciting and entertaining stories about people who tried to escape from prison - one of the most recurrent and classic literary topics of any time - very famous stories that inspired poets, novelists, screenwriters and film directors, along with equally extraordinary escapes that remained almost unknown. In addition to the stories and chronicles, the book also collects eyewitness accounts narrated by the protagonists of some prison escapes and includes a significant repertoire of images on the theme. Barbara Balzerani CRONACA DI UN’ATTESA (Diary of a wait) memoir DeriveApprodi 2011 p. 128 - € 13.00 Cronaca di un’attesa is the story of the last year the author spent on parole before the end of sentence. When you can begin to count months, and after decades of hiding and jail, you can finally change the look and perspective. It is like living a suspended time of an eve on the threshold of a doorway that opens onto an unknown, inviting and elusive landscape.
    [Show full text]
  • CLOCK TOWER BOOKS, 5 Market Street, Hay on Wye, Les Barrett : Good Quality General Books, Rare and Classic Hereford HR3 5AF
    1. THE CHILDREN’S BOOKSHOP. Toll Cottage, Pontvaen, 3. THE OLD ELECTRIC SHOP. 10 Broad Street, Hay-on- 7. TANGLED PARROT @ Eighteen Rabbit. 2 Lion St, Hay, 12. HAY-ON-WYE BOOKSELLERS. 13/14 High Town, Hay-on-Wye, HR3 5EW. Tel: (01497) 821083. Wye, HR3 5DB. Tel: 01497 821194 HR3 5AA. 01497 822882 HR3 5AA. Selection of new and used Hay-on-Wye, Hereford. Tel: (01497) 820875. Just outside Hay on Wye on the Clifford road, a few hundred Email: [email protected] A shop of marvellous music books alongside a selection of new and second hand vinyl www.hayonwyebooksellers.com Quality secondhand and things of interest, both new and vintage, with ever-changing and CD’s. Email: [email protected] yards beyond the Co-op supermarket. We have a large and antiquarian books - suit scholars, collectors and light-hearted varied stock, covering all aspects of children’s literature. On- furniture, homewares, books, clothes and gifts. Within, we www.tangledparrot.com site parking. Books bought (phone first, if possible). Open have a fantastic fully-licensed vegetarian café with inventive, bookworms. We also offer a varied selection of new books at half- 8. MURDER AND MAYHEM. 5 Lion St, Hay-on-Wye, price or less. Large clearance section. Browsers welcome. 9.30-5.30 Mon-Sat. Email: [email protected]. modern food created daily, excellent coffee and indulgent Hereford, HR3 5AA. Tel: (01497) 821613. Walk or stalk Web: www.childrensbookshop.com freshly-made cakes. Open 10am-5pm, every day. We are always interested in buying libraries or small collections.
    [Show full text]